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Acting Director Of Texas Liquor Agency Abruptly Quits

Bob Daemmrich for The Texas Tribune
Ed Swedberg, deputy executive director of the Texas Alcoholic Beverage Commission, answers questions during the House Committee on General Investigating & Ethics meeting on April 13, 2017.

Only weeks into the job, the acting executive director of the Texas Alcoholic Beverage Commission is calling it quits.

Ed Swedberg’s abrupt and unexpected resignation from the agency, effective Monday, marks the sixth high-level departure since April from the agency that oversees alcohol regulation in Texas. The TABC has been rocked by revelations of lavish spending, mismanagement and regulatory overreach.

Swedberg, the agency's deputy executive director since 2012, took over the top job on a temporary basis in May. He notified TABC Chairman Kevin Lilly of his decision to step down in a hand-written letter Friday. He said he was quitting because he did not want to participate in the “termination” of Licensing Director Amy Harrison.

Sources told The Texas Tribune over the weekend that Harrison, who helped oversee the creation of a controversial flier depicting agency honchos partying during out-of-state junkets, had not resigned or been terminated.

“I believe you are a good man who faces a very challenging situation and who must make some difficult decisions,” Swedberg wrote. “However my conscience will not allow me to take part in the termination of Amy Harrison from the commission.”

Lilly, selected by Gov. Greg Abbott to reform the agency, said in a statement Sunday that he was looking ahead to the selection of a new executive director. The commission meets Tuesday to consider finalists for the job.

“At this stage we are 100 percent focused on finding an extraordinary executive director,” Lilly said. “He or she will be the foundation upon which the building blocks of this agency will be rebuilt.”

The exodus of high-ranking officials began after the Tribune reported in March that top officials, including Swedberg and Harrison, had been jet-setting around the country to attend conferences at swanky resorts from Florida to Hawaii. More recently, the Tribune reported on the agency’s controversial attempt to cancel all 164 permits for Spec’s liquor stores or fine them up to $713 million. A panel of judges, in a stinging legal rebuke, said the agency failed to prove any serious infractions and recommended no financial penalties be levied against the liquor store chain.

The Texas Legislature has also put the TABC in its crosshairs. Earlier this year state lawmakers voted to bar the agency from traveling out of state except for law enforcement purposes. And top agency honchos got a brutal grilling in April before the House Committee on General Investigating and Ethics about the spending controversies and the agency’s failure to produce accurate reports about the state-owned vehicles the top brass has been driving.

A few days after the April hearing, director Sherry Cook announced she was stepping down as of May 23, leading the way for Swedberg to take the helm on an interim basis. Besides Swedberg, the agency’s general counsel, chief of enforcement and head of internal affairs have all left the agency since the beginning of July.

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From the Texas Tribune

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Jay Root is a native of Liberty. He never knew any reporters growing up, and he has never taken a journalism class in his life. But somehow he got hooked on the news business. It all started when he walked into the offices of The Daily Texan, his college newspaper, during his last year at the University of Texas in 1987. He couldn't the resist the draw: it was the the biggest collection of misfits ever assembled. After graduating, he took a job at a Houston chemical company and realized it wasn't for him. Soon he was applying for an unpaid internship at the Houston Post in 1990, and it turned into a full-time job that same year. He has been a reporter ever since. He has covered natural disasters, live music and Texas politics — not necessarily in that order. He was Austin bureau chief of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram for a dozen years, most of them good. He also covered politics and the Legislature for The Associated Press before joining the staff of the Tribune.
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